Before your first visit
A first visit is, above all, a conversation. It is an opportunity to understand your health history and goals, to explain how the practice works, and to determine together whether comprehensive longevity medicine is the right fit for you.
What to bring
- Recent medical records and lab results — any results from the past one to two years are helpful, even if incomplete.
- A current medication and supplement list — including doses where you know them.
- Your health history — significant diagnoses, procedures, and relevant family history.
- Your questions and goals — what prompted your interest, and what you hope to understand or achieve.
Insurance and payment
Comprehensive longevity medicine includes services that are often not covered by insurance. The practice will be transparent with you about the cost of the evaluation and of ongoing care, so that you can make an informed decision before committing. Specific questions about cost and payment can be raised when you contact the practice.
The intake process
For patients who decide to proceed, the structured onboarding sequence — the comprehensive evaluation, the review consultation, and the first 90 days — is described in detail on the next page.